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A Chinese Education, for a Price

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Sim Chi Yin for The New York Times

The demands for bribes can start before a child enters kindergarten.
By DAN LEVIN Published: November 21, 2012

BEIJING For Chinese children and their devoted parents, education has long been seen as the key to getting ahead in a highly competitive society. But just as money and power grease business deals and civil servant promotions, the academic race here is increasingly rigged in favor of the wealthy and well connected, who pay large sums and use connections to give their children an edge at government-run schools. Nearly everything has a price, parents and educators say, from school admissions and placement in top classes to leadership positions in Communist youth groups. Even front-row seats near the blackboard or a post as class monitor are up for sale.

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Zhao Hua, a migrant from Hebei Province who owns a small electronics business here, said she was forced to deposit $4,800 into a bank account to enroll her daughter in a Beijing elementary school. At the bank, she said, she was stunned to encounter officials from the district education committee armed with a list of students and how much each family had to pay. Later, school officials made her sign a document saying the fee was a voluntary donation.

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In China Schools, a Culture of Bribery Spreads - NYTimes.com

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/22/world/asia/in-china-schools-a-cultu...

Helm (November 18, 2012)

Of course I knew it was illegal, she said. But if you dont pay, your child will go nowhere. Bribery has become so rife that Xi Jinping devoted his first speech after being named the Communist Partys new leader this month to warning the Politburo that corruption could lead to the collapse of the party and the state if left unchecked. Indeed, ordinary Chinese have become inured to a certain level of official malfeasance in business and politics. But the lack of integrity among educators and school administrators is especially dispiriting, said Li Mao, an educational consultant in Beijing. Its much more upsetting when it happens with teachers because our expectations of them are so much higher, he said.

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Sim Chi Yin for The New York Times

In Beijing, some parents are forced to pay thousands of dollars to school administrators simply to enroll their children in elementary school.

Affluent parents in the United States and around the world commonly seek to provide their children every advantage, of course, including paying for tutors and test preparation courses, and sometimes turning to private schools willing to accept wealthy students despite poor grades. But critics say Chinas state-run education system promoted as the hallmark of Communist meritocracy is being overrun by bribery and cronyism. Such corruption has broadened the gulf between the haves and have-nots as Chinese families see their hopes for the future sold to the highest bidder. Corruption is pervasive in every part of Chinese society, and education is no exception, Mr. Li said. It begins even before the first day of school as the competition for admission to elite schools has created a lucrative side business for school officials and those connected to them. Each spring, the Clean China Kindergarten, which is affiliated with the prestigious Tsinghua University and situated on its manicured campus in Beijing, receives a flood of requests from parents who see enrollment there as a conduit into one of Chinas best universities. Officially, the school is open only to children of Tsinghua faculty. But for the right price about 150,000 renminbi, or about $24,000, according to a staff member who spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid retaliation a Tsinghua professor can be persuaded to sponsor an applicant. Parents with less direct connections have to bribe a chain of people for their child to be admitted to the kindergarten. The more removed you are from the school, the more money you need, the staff member said. It can really add up. A school official denied that outsiders could pay their way in. The costs can increase as college gets closer. Chinese news media reported recently that the going bribery rate for admission to a high school linked to the renowned Renmin University in Beijing is $80,000 to $130,000.
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Shi Da and Mia Li contributed research.


A version of this article appeared in print on November 22, 2012, on page A8 of the New York edition with the headline: A Chinese Education, for a Price.
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In China Schools, a Culture of Bribery Spreads - NYTimes.com

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/22/world/asia/in-china-schools-a-cultu...

China Bribery and Kickbacks

Education (K-12) Corruption (Institutional)

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